Raspberry Pi Zero Replaces Broken Laptop Optical Drive

Sometimes a broken laptop is an opportunity for invention. This project was created and shared by a maker who goes by Ollie242. After a malfunctioning optical drive proved to be more of a burden than a feature, Ollie242 decided to remove it completely. With a gaping hole in the side of the laptop, the decision was made to install a Raspberry Pi Zero W in its place.

The Raspberry Pi is embedded in the laptop hardware and even draws power from it. Ollie242 included a breadboard that slides out with the Pi that can be used for projects whenever you want.

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Ash Hill
Contributing Writer
  • neojack
    when i read the title i was like "how a pi can read cds anyway??"

    An accurate title would me more like
    "Raspberry Pi Zero Fitted in Laptop Optical Drive Bay"

    or

    "How to fit a Rasperry pi zero inside your laptop's optical drive bay"

    Still, i don't understand ho he connects to the pi? I guess the pi is configured to connect on his wifi, and he acces trough it?
    It means that when traveling he would need to bring the wifi router with him?:D

    (can't mock him, i crossed the Atlantic with my entire rig, PSU, Mobo, heatsink, fans, HDDS, GPU ahah)
    Reply
  • kbel
    Hi neojack, he used the notebook to setup a Wifi hotspot, so yes he carries his access point everywhere his notebook goes.
    Reply
  • Scooterfitz
    I agree, this title is misleading. From the title, I was expecting a project where the Pi Zero was EMULATING the optical drive, where one might load an.ISO to the Pi Zero, and the Pi Zero presented the.ISO as a physical CD/DVD/BRay to the host computer through its SATA port. I was excited about that prospect, especially considering it could possibly be adapted to other uses, like consoles that have failed optical drives.
    Reply
  • kbel
    Rigth, that would be great. However having a raspberry Zero there with all its connectivity.. I would use the available space to buffer the Raspberry's GPIO to avoid electrical damaging of the whole system.
    Reply
  • urbanman2004
    The title was sort of misleading since it had me under the impression that a Pi could read "discs" (virtually, as a only logical option), but as I read the article, the premise became more clear.
    Reply